The question presented by these two appeals is whether the business of quarrying and crushing stone and sand is “manufacturing,” as that term is used in G. L. c. 63, § 42B 1 and G. L. c. 59, § 5, Sixteenth (5). 2
The Appellate Tax Board (board) sustained the refusal of the Commissioner of Revenue (Commissioner) to classify the taxpayer as a manufacturing corporation for the years 1981 and *671 1982. We agree with the board’s substantive decision and do not reach the taxpayer’s argument that the board erred in dismissing its 1981 petition for lack of jurisdiction.
The taxpayer 3 is and was for the relevant time periods a Delaware corporation with its principal offices in Brockton, and its principal place of business in Acushnet. Applications to the Commissioner for classification as a manufacturing corporation were denied on August 5, 1981, and March 26, 1982. The taxpayer appealed both denials. As to the first, the board ruled that it was without jurisdiction, as the taxpayer’s appeal was not timely filed in accordance with G. L. c. 58, § 2. 4 As to the second, the board ruled on the merits that the taxpayer was not a “manufacturing” corporation.
The facts, as stipulated by the parties, are as follows. The taxpayer begins by removing the overburden of soil, vegetation, and soft rock from the bedrock at its Acushnet properties. Holes are precisely drilled into the bedrock and explosives carefully inserted which, when detonated, blast the solid rock into pieces small enough to be transported by truck to the processing plant. There the large rocks are crushed smaller and screened to separate them by size. This process is controlled by an elaborate electronic control panel operated by experienced technicians. The crushed stone accounts for 85% of the taxpayer’s product. Of this, 30% is sold for use “as is” as road base material or for leaching fields and septic systems. The remainder is sold to customers who use it in making bituminous asphalt or concrete.
*672 The taxpayer also produces sand. In this process, crushed stone screenings are combined with water, larger stones are removed, and sand of eleven gradations is separated in a classifier chamber. These eleven gradations are blended by technicians to produce two basic sizes of sand, which are used in making asphalt or concrete.
There is no dispute in this case as to the board’s findings of fact and, in any event, those findings are final as long as they are supported by substantial evidence.
New Boston Garden Corp.
v.
Assessors of Boston,
The decisive question here is whether the board was correct in concluding that the taxpayer had not “effectuated the kind and degree of change in its raw material which ... is necessary in order to characterize an activity as manufacturing.” We conclude that it was.
The definition of “manufacturing,” though “chameleon-like,”
Southeastern Sand & Gravel, Inc.
v.
Commissioner of Revenue,
Numerous other States have held that quarrying and crushing stone do not constitute “manufacturing.” Recently, in
Solite Corp.
v.
County of King George,
Alternatively, the taxpayer argues that since its product is used by others in making asphalt, its process is a necessary first step in a manufacturing process. We have held that “proc
*674
esses which themselves do not produce a finished product for the ultimate consumer would be deemed ‘manufacturing’ . . . so long as they constitute an essential and integral part of a total manufacturing process.”
Joseph T. Rossi Corp.
v.
State Tax Comm’n,
The taxpayer argues that it did not receive notice that it had not been classified as a corporation engaged in manufacturing for 1981 until August 5 of that year, so that its appeal filed on September 2, 1981, was within the thirty-day period provided in G. L. c. 58, § 2. See note 4, supra. The Commissioner, on the other hand, argues that distribution of the list to the boards of assessors in April, 1981, was notice of the taxpayer’s failure to be classified and thus the appeal period *675 expired in May. As there is no dispute that the taxpayer was engaged in the same business in 1981 and 1982, we do not reach the jurisdictional issue.
Decision of the Appellate Tax Board affirmed.
Notes
General Laws c. 63, § 42B, as appearing in St. 1976, c. 415, § 34, provides, in pertinent part: “Every corporation, association or organization established, organized or chartered under laws other than those of the commonwealth, which has a usual place of business in the commonwealth and is engaged in manufacturing therein . . . shall, for the purposes of this chapter, be deemed to be a foreign manufacturing corporation . . . .”
Clause Sixteenth (5) provides that the machinery of foreign manufacturing corporations shall be exempt from local taxation, although it is indirectly taxed by inclusion in the measure of the excise imposed on the corporation under G. L. c. 63.
Franki Found. Co.
v.
State Tax Comm’n,
Tilcon-Warren Quarries Inc. has discontinued operations and Tilcon Quarries Massachusetts Inc. has assumed its operations. We shall refer to a single taxpayer.
General Laws c. 58, § 2, as amended by St. 1978, c. 514, § 35, provides in pertinent part: “Any person aggrieved by any classification made by the commissioner . . . may, on or before April thirtieth of said year or the thirtieth day after such list is sent out [to the boards of assessors] by the commissioner, whichever is later, file an application with the appellate tax board . . . .” The “list” referred to is a list of corporations classified as “manufacturing” corporations which the Commissioner is required to forward to each board of assessors by April 1 each year. This list is a public document and can be judicially noticed.
Mariani
v.
Trustees of Tufts College,
